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Mysterious Booms


Page 12

Hundreds of people already have used a web page to fill out felt reports, Powell said. You can fill out a report by going to the web site http://www.geosci.unc.edu/web/tremor.html. More reports are needed from South Campu because that's where early analysis of seismographic data points, she said. The source of the boom was underneath the Health Affairs area of campus, Powell said preliminary analysis of data showed. Although demolition work has been going on there, Powell said UNC Hospitals physical plant officials have insisted nothing out of the ordinary was done that afternoon. "Looking at the signals, we cannot yet determine if it was an earthquake or energy put into the ground," she said. It's possible a small earthquake was triggered by a cumulative effect of the demolition work, Powell said. However, analysis of felt reports may shift the charted center of the event away from the hospital area, she said.

Southern Ohio/Northern Kentucky

Source: home.fuse.net/ufo/may15_97.html

At 1:15 p.m., Thursday May 15, 1997, an explosive sound described as a ‘heavy jolt sounding like thunder’ rolled across a wide area of Southern Ohio and Northern Kentucky. This makes the third such event since April 19, 1997 involving unexplainable explosive sounds heard in the Cincinnati area. Unlike the first two events, the May 15 happening was widely reported from a broad area encompassing at least 104 miles from as far away as Aurora, Indiana to West Union, Ohio, and involved multiple blasts. Mr. Charles Stuart heard the sounds from his vantage point in West Chester, where he first thought it was thunder. He described the blasts as 6 separate jolts happening over a 10-minute duration.

An Adams County resident contacted this writer to report a ‘sonic boom’ heard around 2:00 p.m. The boom greatly startled her and, she said, "shook her teeth." Like the first two events from Milford and Newtown, the Clermont County area was the locality from which most complaints originated. The Clermont County Sheriffs Department (513-732-2231) advised that they had been ‘kept in a void with a black shroud over our head’ because they had no explanation for the sound. The calls originated at 3:45 p.m. from Tate Township, 3:52 p.m. from Monroe Township, 3:55 p.m. from Washington Township, 4:00 p.m. from Miami Township police departments. "We started getting calls from all over the county, we were swamped. They started out coming from Tate Township, and then they gradually spread out, the reports came from the far south and the far north parts of the county," the dispatcher stated.

A police dispatcher from Delhi Township also said that reports were generated from the entire ‘west side of town’ including parts of Zion Road, Whitewater Township and Anderson. The Delhi dispatcher stated that a second spate of booms were reported at 3:45 p.m. According to Mr. Terry Donald of WKRC Channel 12, the news department had received calls from Aurora, Indiana, Delhi, Clermont County and Boone County, Kentucky. The general suspicion is that something was travelling from west to east. WKRC Ch. 12 News had contacted Wright Patterson Air Force Base, and the base official stated that no super-sonic aircraft were stationed there, only transport planes. At about that time, stated the reporter, an F-16 jet (which can go supersonic) out of Springfield A.N.G. base did perform ‘touch and go’ maneuvers at Wright-Pat, but did not attribute the boom to this aircraft. WKRC Ch. 12 also confirmed that multiple booms were reported, and added that a Delhi resident called the news station to complain that her ‘little glass knick-nacks’ shattered, and also received a call from a resident from Butler, Kentucky, whose front door had exploded from the blast.

700 WLW news reported that DELTA AIRLINES talked to the FAA tower, where the tower said the sound was due to an ‘aircraft engine backdraft.’ They did not explain how this explanation would account for a sound that was heard as far out as Adams County or described as ‘booms’ which happened at least 6 times over an estimated 1-hour time period. A phone call was made to Delta Airlines (606-767-3427) where they denied the explanation. "I have no idea what that sound was," said the telephone receptionist who said he had fielded a number of previous inquiries. "I’m trying to find out where 700 WLW came up with the explanation of an air-craft backdraft, because nobody out here knows anything about that phenomenon whatsoever."

The suspected sonic booms remain unexplained at this time until military agencies flying supersonic aircraft claim responsibility. At 12:08 a.m., Friday morning May 9, 1997, a mysterious "BOOM" shook a large area in the vicinities of Debolt and Main Street (S.R. 32) in the community of Newtown, Ohio, which is in the eastern section of Hamilton County. Another unexplained disturbance on April 19th was reported to the Clermont County and Miami Township police and fire services by residents of Thielmans Mobile Home Park on State Route 28 near Interstate 275. This explosive sound was accompanied by a flash of light.


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